Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said on Friday that he had decided to “sever the connection” between Spain’s diplomatic mission and Palestinians in the occupied West Bank over Madrid’s recognition of a Palestinian state.

“I have decided to sever the connection between Spain’s representation in Israel and the Palestinians, and to prohibit the Spanish consulate in Jerusalem from providing services to Palestinians from the West Bank,” Katz said in a post on X.

It was not immediately clear how Israel would carry out the threat.

Asked by AFP about the practicalities and consequences of Katz’s announcement, the Foreign Ministry did not immediately comment.

Katz said that his decision was made “in response to Spain’s recognition of a Palestinian state and the anti-Semitic call by Spain’s deputy prime minister to… ‘liberate Palestine from the river to the sea.'”

Spain, Ireland and Norway announced on Wednesday their decision to recognize the State of Palestine later this month, drawing rebuke from Israel.

The Israeli government denounced the largely symbolic move as a “reward for terror” as the war in the Gaza Strip, sparked by Hamas’ unprecedented October 7 attack, nears an eighth month.

The foreign ministry warned on Thursday that Israel’s ties with Ireland, Norway and Spain would face “serious consequences.”

In his Friday announcement, Katz criticized remarks on X by the Spanish government’s number three Yolanda Diaz, a far-left party leader and labour minister.

Welcoming the announcement of the formal recognition of a Palestinian state, Diaz said, “We cannot stop here. Palestine will be free, from the river to the sea.”

The pro-Palestinian rallying cry refers to historic Palestine’s borders under the British mandate, which extended from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean Sea, before the creation of Israel in 1948.

The phrase “from the river to the sea” is sometimes also used as a Zionist slogan for a Greater Israel that would span over the same territory.

With AFP